Yearly Archives: 2024

The Dangers of Curiosity in the Mental Health Field and the Family System

20
From Daniel Mackler: There are consequences to being curious and asking questions: real conclusions sometimes are not easy to bear.
A young man sitting on steps outside looking sad

Trauma and Resources Within Social Context

12
What is seen as pathology is a complex web of surviving strategies learned in aversive circumstances that can cause distress later.

Mental Health Patients ‘Raped and Sexually Assaulted’ as NHS Abuse Scandal Revealed

2
From The Independent: A major investigation by The Independent and Sky News has revealed the horrific scale of sexual abuse and assault within the UK’s psychiatric system.

The Trauma of Psychosis: My “Bipolar” Journey

56
Somatic therapy helped me process the trauma of my psychosis: the two days of my brain telling me the world was ending and awful things were being done to my family.
Young boy looking through the window

As a Psychologist, I’ve Seen Many Children Misdiagnosed as Autistic—It’s a Clinical Catastrophe

48
The ASD diagnosis glosses over the many developmental specifics that might underlie a child’s challenges related to social communication.

Black Dog by Tel S.

0
I keep seeing a black dog next to me. Will this chase me all my life? The dog, the needles, the pills, the razors, the knives? The...
A woman looks to the side in distress, while holding a wedding band and a pen to sign divorce documents

The Social-Emotional Distress Field, or How I Divorced “Mental Health”

19
At this crisis point, I realised that resigning from my job was not enough. I needed to divorce from the Mental Health field as a whole. 
Man with hands against glass, out of focus, looking distressed

Are “Trauma/Addiction Experts” and Psychiatrists Misleading Us?

56
“Experts” refer to an ill-defined concept of “trauma,” but unique traumatic experiences should not be generalized.

How Woman’s Dramatic Escape From NHS Psychiatric Care Exposed ‘Scandal’ of Sex Abuse Complaints

4
From Sky News: Patient 11 - a new joint podcast from Sky News and The Independent - investigates Alexis Quinn's escape from psychiatric 'care' which has now exposed a catalogue of sexual abuse and harassment complaints in NHS England 'care.'

How Early Relationships Can Define Reality – For Better or Worse

4
From Jay Reid Psychotherapy: Kids will do an amazing amount of shape-shifting to get their parents to be willing to care for them.
Photo of an open hand on a deep red background with scattered white pills

Much of U.S. Healthcare Is Broken: How to Fix It (Chapter 2, Part 6)

0
Les Ruthven addresses the research showing that psychiatric hospitalization increases suicidality.
Climber snaps the safety carabiner on the rope. A climber on a cliff ties a safety knot

RADAR and the Dignity of Risk-Taking

6
The goal may not be to eliminate risk, but to respect the risk that people are willing to take, and to help make tapering as safe as possible.

Oceans of Energy: What Paranoia Reveals About Interconnection

37
The psychotic and the mystic swim in the same water. But why do some swim, and some drown?
Unhappy Woman In Converstion With Friend Or Counsellor

“Get Over It”? A Response to Empower Parents to Repair Instead of Victim Blame

30
An epidemic of children blaming their parents in therapy? In my 20 years as a psychologist, I've seen the opposite.

The FDA Warned an Asthma Drug Could Induce Despair. Many Were Never Told.

0
From The New York Times: Singulair, now a generic, is still used by millions of Americans even after thousands of patients and dozens of studies have described harm. Children face the greatest risks of the drug's ill effects.
3D illustration of a matrix with tablets and the words risks and benefits. Concept of clinical trials results

Two Out of Three Find Antidepressant Effects Not Worth Burdens

1
New study reveals: 2 in 3 people need more than the current antidepressant benefits to consider them worthwhile.

The Dangers of Precision Medicine: Mental Health Is Not a Battlefield

22
Rather than a war to be fought within individuals, we should envision mental health as a garden to be carefully nurtured.

How the Life Coaching Industry Sells Pseudo-Solutions to Our Deepest Problems

15
From Current Affairs: The cultural pressures to become a self-made individual have intensified at the same time that sources of social support have decreased. Enter the life coach.
Pattern of blue and yellow pills or tablets on a pink background. concept of medicine, pharmacy and coronavirus. copy space

SSRI Withdrawal has Social, Cognitive, and Emotional Consequences

0
New research finds that the non-physical aspects of withdrawal from SSRIs are often overlooked.
A male doctor looks slightly angry at a woman who looks sad in profile

“Impairment: Says Who?”: The Fundamental Question of Mental Health Treatment

46
The criterion of "impairment" is defined not by the person seeking treatment, but by other people: parents, clinicians, courts, employers, and so on.

Lady Yellow, Lady Blue by Brighid Aime

0
2am is a bipolar blessing. On the one hand, Her clock ticks, waking worlds away. On the other… Dreams tattoo pulses of heart, Maneuvered by her beaten, brush stroking...
Miniature hazmat team inspects hazardous pills

Much of U.S. Healthcare Is Broken: How to Fix It (Chapter 2, Part 5)

1
Les Ruthven addresses increases in suicide and homicide caused by antidepressant drugs.
AI-generated image of a snowy yeti and an ice-crusted double-helix

Searching for the “Psychiatric Yeti”: Schizophrenia Is Not Genetic

180
After decades of study, billions of dollars spent, and thousands of studies conducted, the failure to identify any genes for schizophrenia should definitively put to rest the notion that schizophrenia is a genetic disorder, according to E. Fuller Torrey.

Psychic Gardening and Walking the Sensitive Path

22
I learned that trying to fight, ignore, push away what I was dealing with was not working. I had to face it, accept it, work out what it had come to teach me and then work out how to set it free.

Workplace Wellness Programs Have Little Benefit, Study Finds

0
From The New York Times: An Oxford researcher measured the effect of popular workplace mental health interventions, and discovered little to none.